Focus on Athletes biographies are produced by the IAAF Communications Dept, and not by the IAAF Statistics and Documentation Division. If you have any enquiries concerning the information, please use the Contact IAAF page, selecting ‘Focus on Athletes Biographies’ in the drop down menu of contact area options.

Updated September 5, 2014

Sandra
PERKOVIC, Croatia (Discus Throw, Shot Put)

Born 21 June 1990

183 cm/ 85 kg

Coach: Edis Elkasevic

Sandra Perkovic is today the absolute ruler in the discus throw.
She is the only female discus thrower during the last two decades who threw
over 70 meters, and won gold medals at five consecutive major competitions in
which she participated.

But, not so long ago, Sandra Perkovic was on
the brink of life and death. It was Christmas 2008.

"It all
started with abdominal pain. In the hospital I was wrongly diagnosed with
intestinal viruses, but in fact it was appendicitis. I came to the hospital
when I had already colapsed, with
temperatures of 41-42 degrees, and I had 18,000 white blood cells. If it had not been for Doctor Lackovic, they
would have sent me home. After his diagnosis, they sent me to surgery, but the
operation was performed by another doctor and was not successful.

Six days later, my stomach was worse, and they told me
that this is normal. Doctor Lackovic was again a
savior when he said that it is sepsis and again I had surgery. The first
operation was performed on 25 December 2008. and the other on 6 January 2009.
You see that dates? The Good obviously had
some plans with me. Doctors told
my mother, Vesna, that 90 percent of people do not survive the operation
and to go home and let them pray to survive. They told me later that I have
endured thanks to a strong body, otherwise I would not have survived. Nobody
believed that I would return to training this year ", says Sandra Perkovic.

Not only is she back, but after that everything in her career began to take
place at the speed of a film. Already in July the same year, at the European
Junior Championships in Novi Sad, she won the gold medal in the discus throw. She
threw 62.44 - more than seven meters meters further than her nearest rival, which
is the largest difference to the best placed runner-up in the history of the discus
at the European Championships.

Because the mark was over the qualifying standard
for the World Championships, in Berlin, she went there to gain experience.
However, she eventually reached the finals placing ninth with 60.77. Although
this was a great success for 19-year-old
athletes, Sandra was crying in the Mixed Zone.

"I know that I can do much better and that is why I'm crying. If I threw
the best and I was tenth, everything would be OK," she said then.

Everybody though that was funny, because Sandra was competing in a discipline
in which the best results are achieved at 28 or 30 years of age, and the oldest
participant in the Berlin final, Natalya Sadova, was almost 20 years older than
her. We thought then that we will only see the real Sandra Perkovic 5 or 6
years later, and until then there would be many situations in which she would
cry because she could not achieve high positions near discus throwers who could be her mother. But things happened
quite differently.

Already in March 2010. Sandra's discus, at the Croatian Winter Cup in Split,
flew up to 66.85, which was at that moment the best result achieved in the last
two years. We journalists tried to explain that to Croatian athletic fans using
the following words: "This result would take Sandra to both Olympic in
Beijing and World gold and Berlin!"

She herself commented by saying, "I'm not too surprised because I know how
far my discus is flying in training. But to talk about the World and Olympic
gold ... I am still too young to think about these results. Well, just in the
last year Berlin did I begin to seriously think about throwing the discus.
"

And so, again for a while we seriously thought about Sandra's results, although
in the Diamons League she recorded very strong performances. Among other
things, she won the New York City meet, but we still did not dare to declare
her a candidate for one of the medals at the European Championships, in
Barcelona. The start of the Championship was not the best. Sandra in
qualification threw only 55.70, and she thought that she would not qualify for
the final.

Disappointed, she jumped the fence in the Mixed Zone, and
fled from the Croatian media. Later she told us she had not seen us. However,
it finally turned out that the mentioned result was enough for the final!

"Oh, it was no problem. Sandra will be in the finals of all to break,"
argued her coach Ivan Ivancic.

Two days later, Sandra, already in the first series in the final, threw the discus
to 62.80 and secured a medal. When we all saw her already with the silver
around her neck, in the last series she threw 64.67 and took gold ahead of
Nicoleta Grasu. She had thus become the youngest European champion in the
discus throw in history. In the event where the next youngest finalist in
Barcelona was still five years older than Sandra and the Croatian discus thrower was born when
Romania's Nicoleta Grasu prepared celebration of her 19th birthday!

Only then did the Croatian public understand what kind of pearl we have in
athletics, and wanted to find out all about Sandra. And her life, even when we leave aside the almost fatal rupture of the
appendix, is a truly interesting story.

"I was an active and playful child, and when I was five years old and my parents divorced, my brother and I
moved with my mother to stay with my grandmother in Dubrava. I started Athletic school, plus I e trained for
basketball and volleyball, given that I was high. But in the sixth class of primary
school, it was clear that athletics prevailed., I began to intensively engage
in shot put and hammer thorw, and in 2001 came to the club Dinamo Zrinjevac.
Three years later, in the first high school year, when I started training with
coach Ivan Ivancic, he immediately recognised my talent for throwing the discus
and so it all began. We started working together in the winter of 2005. Before
that I was running and jumping, no connection. My real development began early
2009, after the surgery. When I entered the final of the World Championships in
Berlin, it was an indication that we are working great. I train twice a day, in
rain and snow, I throw the discus . We train for all kinds of conditions. A lot
of trips we had to improvise, no gym, no pool ...", says Sandra.

The rest of 2010 brought Sandra victory on the Diamond League
finals in Brussels, with the new Croatian record (66.93) and her first victory
before the home crowd at the athletics meeting in Zagreb (65.56). Teenage
girls, thus, begin in athletics and start making their first fee.

"It was excellent on the Diamond League circuit this year. But honestly, I do not think just
about money. I'm not materialistic, seriously. That is in the last place when
thinking about athletics. I can live off of what we do, but I always live well,
always cope. I will, I believe, continue
to throw a very long time. I'm only 20, am not get tired or thinking about
it."

Indeed, it was only the beginning, the start
a career about which one day we will write as one of the most outstanding in
the history of athletics. However, Sandra's golden series was briefly
interrupted in 2011.

In June 2011, it was announced that Perkovic
had failed two doping tests conducted in the month before at the Diamond League
meetings in Rome and Shanghai. She tested positive for methylhexanamine, a
psychostimulant banned by the World Anti-Doping Agency since 2010. Perković
stated that the positive results were due to Nox Pump, an American-made energy
drink product she had been using without knowing it contained banned
substances. She did not request an analysis of her B-sample. The Croatian
Athletics Federation gave Perković a six-month suspension, later confirmed by
the IAAF, recognising that she had no intention to take the banned stimulant,
nor was she aware of using it. The suspension ran until 7 December, keeping
Perkovic out of competition for the rest of the 2011 season, including the
World Championships.

Sandra was back in June 2012 in Helsinki,
where she defended her European title. Two months later, she won the Olympic
gold medal in London, with a new national record - 69.11. It was the last medal
she won with her first coach, Ivan Ivancic (who died in August 2014).

In early 2013, Sandra began working with a
new coach, Edis Elkasevic, a former World junior champion in the shot put, and
also her boyfriend. With the new coach, she continues the golden streak
interrupted in 2011. At the World Championships in Moscow, she won a gold medal
and after that she added a second title as overall Diamond League winner.

The following year, at the European
Championships in Zürich she won her third consecutive European gold, as the
first female discus thrower in the history. Her discus flew to 71.08 m, which
is the longest shot in the last 22 years!

Sandra Perkovic is only 24 years old and sees
no end to her success. And, as she says, for a long time does not intend to
engage in anything other than throwing the disc.
An alternative to
throwing the discus does not exist.

"I think what I would do if I did not throw the discus? No. No I would not
have worked on something else."

Talking about the limits of her capabilities,
she repeats two short sentences: "There are no limits! I just work every
day and create one by one goal."

Focus on Athletes biographies are produced by the IAAF Communications Dept, and not by the IAAF Statistics and Documentation Division. If you have any enquiries concerning the information, please use the Contact IAAF page, selecting ‘Focus on Athletes Biographies’ in the drop down menu of contact area options.

Updated September 5, 2014

Sandra
PERKOVIC, Croatia (Discus Throw, Shot Put)

Born 21 June 1990

183 cm/ 85 kg

Coach: Edis Elkasevic

Sandra Perkovic is today the absolute ruler in the discus throw.
She is the only female discus thrower during the last two decades who threw
over 70 meters, and won gold medals at five consecutive major competitions in
which she participated.

But, not so long ago, Sandra Perkovic was on
the brink of life and death. It was Christmas 2008.

"It all
started with abdominal pain. In the hospital I was wrongly diagnosed with
intestinal viruses, but in fact it was appendicitis. I came to the hospital
when I had already colapsed, with
temperatures of 41-42 degrees, and I had 18,000 white blood cells. If it had not been for Doctor Lackovic, they
would have sent me home. After his diagnosis, they sent me to surgery, but the
operation was performed by another doctor and was not successful.

Six days later, my stomach was worse, and they told me
that this is normal. Doctor Lackovic was again a
savior when he said that it is sepsis and again I had surgery. The first
operation was performed on 25 December 2008. and the other on 6 January 2009.
You see that dates? The Good obviously had
some plans with me. Doctors told
my mother, Vesna, that 90 percent of people do not survive the operation
and to go home and let them pray to survive. They told me later that I have
endured thanks to a strong body, otherwise I would not have survived. Nobody
believed that I would return to training this year ", says Sandra Perkovic.

Not only is she back, but after that everything in her career began to take
place at the speed of a film. Already in July the same year, at the European
Junior Championships in Novi Sad, she won the gold medal in the discus throw. She
threw 62.44 - more than seven meters meters further than her nearest rival, which
is the largest difference to the best placed runner-up in the history of the discus
at the European Championships.

Because the mark was over the qualifying standard
for the World Championships, in Berlin, she went there to gain experience.
However, she eventually reached the finals placing ninth with 60.77. Although
this was a great success for 19-year-old
athletes, Sandra was crying in the Mixed Zone.

"I know that I can do much better and that is why I'm crying. If I threw
the best and I was tenth, everything would be OK," she said then.

Everybody though that was funny, because Sandra was competing in a discipline
in which the best results are achieved at 28 or 30 years of age, and the oldest
participant in the Berlin final, Natalya Sadova, was almost 20 years older than
her. We thought then that we will only see the real Sandra Perkovic 5 or 6
years later, and until then there would be many situations in which she would
cry because she could not achieve high positions near discus throwers who could be her mother. But things happened
quite differently.

Already in March 2010. Sandra's discus, at the Croatian Winter Cup in Split,
flew up to 66.85, which was at that moment the best result achieved in the last
two years. We journalists tried to explain that to Croatian athletic fans using
the following words: "This result would take Sandra to both Olympic in
Beijing and World gold and Berlin!"

She herself commented by saying, "I'm not too surprised because I know how
far my discus is flying in training. But to talk about the World and Olympic
gold ... I am still too young to think about these results. Well, just in the
last year Berlin did I begin to seriously think about throwing the discus.
"

And so, again for a while we seriously thought about Sandra's results, although
in the Diamons League she recorded very strong performances. Among other
things, she won the New York City meet, but we still did not dare to declare
her a candidate for one of the medals at the European Championships, in
Barcelona. The start of the Championship was not the best. Sandra in
qualification threw only 55.70, and she thought that she would not qualify for
the final.

Disappointed, she jumped the fence in the Mixed Zone, and
fled from the Croatian media. Later she told us she had not seen us. However,
it finally turned out that the mentioned result was enough for the final!

"Oh, it was no problem. Sandra will be in the finals of all to break,"
argued her coach Ivan Ivancic.

Two days later, Sandra, already in the first series in the final, threw the discus
to 62.80 and secured a medal. When we all saw her already with the silver
around her neck, in the last series she threw 64.67 and took gold ahead of
Nicoleta Grasu. She had thus become the youngest European champion in the
discus throw in history. In the event where the next youngest finalist in
Barcelona was still five years older than Sandra and the Croatian discus thrower was born when
Romania's Nicoleta Grasu prepared celebration of her 19th birthday!

Only then did the Croatian public understand what kind of pearl we have in
athletics, and wanted to find out all about Sandra. And her life, even when we leave aside the almost fatal rupture of the
appendix, is a truly interesting story.

"I was an active and playful child, and when I was five years old and my parents divorced, my brother and I
moved with my mother to stay with my grandmother in Dubrava. I started Athletic school, plus I e trained for
basketball and volleyball, given that I was high. But in the sixth class of primary
school, it was clear that athletics prevailed., I began to intensively engage
in shot put and hammer thorw, and in 2001 came to the club Dinamo Zrinjevac.
Three years later, in the first high school year, when I started training with
coach Ivan Ivancic, he immediately recognised my talent for throwing the discus
and so it all began. We started working together in the winter of 2005. Before
that I was running and jumping, no connection. My real development began early
2009, after the surgery. When I entered the final of the World Championships in
Berlin, it was an indication that we are working great. I train twice a day, in
rain and snow, I throw the discus . We train for all kinds of conditions. A lot
of trips we had to improvise, no gym, no pool ...", says Sandra.

The rest of 2010 brought Sandra victory on the Diamond League
finals in Brussels, with the new Croatian record (66.93) and her first victory
before the home crowd at the athletics meeting in Zagreb (65.56). Teenage
girls, thus, begin in athletics and start making their first fee.

"It was excellent on the Diamond League circuit this year. But honestly, I do not think just
about money. I'm not materialistic, seriously. That is in the last place when
thinking about athletics. I can live off of what we do, but I always live well,
always cope. I will, I believe, continue
to throw a very long time. I'm only 20, am not get tired or thinking about
it."

Indeed, it was only the beginning, the start
a career about which one day we will write as one of the most outstanding in
the history of athletics. However, Sandra's golden series was briefly
interrupted in 2011.

In June 2011, it was announced that Perkovic
had failed two doping tests conducted in the month before at the Diamond League
meetings in Rome and Shanghai. She tested positive for methylhexanamine, a
psychostimulant banned by the World Anti-Doping Agency since 2010. Perković
stated that the positive results were due to Nox Pump, an American-made energy
drink product she had been using without knowing it contained banned
substances. She did not request an analysis of her B-sample. The Croatian
Athletics Federation gave Perković a six-month suspension, later confirmed by
the IAAF, recognising that she had no intention to take the banned stimulant,
nor was she aware of using it. The suspension ran until 7 December, keeping
Perkovic out of competition for the rest of the 2011 season, including the
World Championships.

Sandra was back in June 2012 in Helsinki,
where she defended her European title. Two months later, she won the Olympic
gold medal in London, with a new national record - 69.11. It was the last medal
she won with her first coach, Ivan Ivancic (who died in August 2014).

In early 2013, Sandra began working with a
new coach, Edis Elkasevic, a former World junior champion in the shot put, and
also her boyfriend. With the new coach, she continues the golden streak
interrupted in 2011. At the World Championships in Moscow, she won a gold medal
and after that she added a second title as overall Diamond League winner.

The following year, at the European
Championships in Zürich she won her third consecutive European gold, as the
first female discus thrower in the history. Her discus flew to 71.08 m, which
is the longest shot in the last 22 years!

Sandra Perkovic is only 24 years old and sees
no end to her success. And, as she says, for a long time does not intend to
engage in anything other than throwing the disc.
An alternative to
throwing the discus does not exist.

"I think what I would do if I did not throw the discus? No. No I would not
have worked on something else."

Talking about the limits of her capabilities,
she repeats two short sentences: "There are no limits! I just work every
day and create one by one goal."